Montreal Gazette

Tornado touches down in Ottawa and Gatineau

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OTTAWA A tornado damaged cars in Gatineau, Que., and houses in a community west of Ottawa on Friday afternoon as much of southern Ontario saw severe thundersto­rms and high wind gusts, Environmen­t Canada said.

Peter Kimbell, a meteorolog­ist with the national weather agency, said the tornado overturned cars on Highway 50 in Gatineau and caused extensive damage to houses in Dunrobin, Ont.

Fire trucks lined streets in Gatineau, where debris and downed trees covered roads. Massive billboards were also overturned near the Sabourin arena.

The city issued a statement Friday announcing the opening of a mobile command post and an emergency measures centre. Municipal authoritie­s also carried out evacuation­s in collaborat­ion with the Red Cross and the campus of Cegep de l’Outaouais was converted into a disaster centre.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urged residents of both cities to “stay safe, follow the instructio­ns of first responders and check in with people who might need extra help.”

“We’re monitoring the situation and thinking of everyone affected,” he said on Twitter.

Ottawa resident Glenn Johnson said he and his partner were in their kitchen just after 5:30 p.m. when the storm blew out their windows.

“We were trying to get down in the basement ... and glass started flying,” said Johnson, who lives in Nepean. “My partner got her foot cut and I got hit with flying glass as we were trying to get the dogs and cat and everything down in the basement.”

He said the roof of his neighbour’s house was torn off and the second storey of another house was gone by the time the intense system passed.

“You can’t even get down the street because there are so many giant trees that had been taken down,” Johnson said.

Meanwhile, Ottawa Hydro said there were more than 85,000 power outages in the city because of the storm.

“There is significan­t damage to the grid and all crews are out assessing damage and will establish a priority restoratio­n,” the utility company said in a tweet.

 ?? WAYNE CUDDINGTON ?? Neighbours rush Friday to a home in Dunrobin, Ont., destroyed in the severe weather but learned that firefighte­rs had already rescued the people inside. Tens of thousands of people are without power.
WAYNE CUDDINGTON Neighbours rush Friday to a home in Dunrobin, Ont., destroyed in the severe weather but learned that firefighte­rs had already rescued the people inside. Tens of thousands of people are without power.

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